Bournemouth repeated a rare feat as they defeated Manchester United 2-1 this week.

The club, which was promoted to the Premier League this season for the first time had just beaten Chelsea by 1-0 last week.

United keeper David de Gea was beaten by Junior Stanislas in just within two minutes of kick-off with a rare direct corner goal.

However, just as United equalised from a Marouane Fellaini goal the club appeared to lose their spirit after half-time.

The visitors could not fight back after Joshua King fired in from Matt Ritchie’s set-piece.

Coach Eddie Howe has much reason to be jubilant, but also remembers a devastating defeat of 5-0 by second division Morecambe exactly six years ago.

‘Someone reminded me of that (the anniversary) earlier,’ Howe said.

‘I didn’t know that, and all the emotions of that game came flooding back. That was a terrible game.’

‘It does show how far the club’s come. Not in your wildest dreams could you have ever imagined when I was standing there watching that Morecambe game that we would be beating Manchester United in the Premier League.’

‘It’s not possible. So it really does prove what can happen in football. It’s an unbelievable game.’

Newcastle players celebrate their winner against Tottenham.

Meanwhile, Newcastle celebrates a second upset win in eight days as they beat Tottenham 2-1.

In a surprising move, manager Steve Mcclaren introduced both Aleksandar Mitrovic and Ayoze Perez late on and both scored as the club moves out the relegation zone to 15th in the Premier League.

Magpies keeper Rob Elliot also frustrated Spurs with two fine saves to deny Erik Lamela before Eric Dier struck in from the corner at 39 minutes.

Newcastle levelled when substitute Aleksandar Mitrovic tapped home after a scramble inside the six-yard box before Perez struck deep into stoppage time.

Tottenham, who would have climbed above Manchester United into fourth spot with victory, are now without a league win in three games.

Mcclaren believes the win had answered critics, but that the club has not turned a corner yet because they were “inconsistent” in the past.

For the first time, the Electronic Sports League (ESL) will be organizing a live Dota 2 tournament in Manila.

Boasting a $250,000 price pool, ESL One Manila worked alongside PLDT Fibr & Smart GameX to set up the one of the biggest eSports competitions in April next year.

This marks the first time that ESL is organizing the event in an Asian country; previous championship events were held exclusively at European and American countries.

Eight teams from all over the globe will feature in the tournament, competing in a single elimination format.

Two teams will get a direct invite based on their past performance while the other participants will be chosen from an online qualifier: one team each from China, Europe, the United States and the Philippines.

The two remaining teams will come from Southeast Asia.

According to Ulrich Schulze, Managing Director of Pro Gaming at ESL, the venue was not a difficult decision to make.

He believed that the Philippines were “a country and community that loves Dota 2”, and that the organizers are “honoured” to hold the event there in a “history making” event.

Since the event was announced on Tuesday, tickets were fast selling out.

Two Bundesliga clubs that were eliminated from the Champions League earlier in the week are set to play against each other in the German League.

Bayer Leverkusen and Borussia Moenchengladbach will look forward to vent some of their Champions League frustration on Saturday.

Although both clubs have failed to reach the knockout stages Moenchengladbach will be the more disappointed team with their European hopes vanquished entirely, while Leverkusen still can play in the Europa League.

However, the club is the more exciting team in the Bundesliga, standing at third place, 14 points behind Bayern Munich and 9 behind Borussia Dortmund.

Coming off a 3-1 victory against the league leaders last week, Andre Schubert’s side now holds an unbeaten streak of 10 matches.

This is simply amazing for a team that suffered 5 straight defeats at the start of the new Bundesliga season.

Meanwhile, Leverkusen started big but now stagnates at eighth place, with Coach Roger Schmidt reportedly “feeling the heat.”

The team creates few chances and scores even less goals, suffering six defeats – nearly as many as their last season.